EXHIBIT A LANDMARK DESIGNATION REPORT Union Park Hotel 1519 W. Warren Boulevard Final Landmark recommendation adopted by the Commission on Chicago Landmarks, February 4, 2010. CITY OF CHICAGO Richard M. Daley, Mayor Department of Zoning and Land Use Planning Patricia A. Scudiero, Commissioner Cover Top: The Union Park Hotel located at 1519 W. Warren Boulevard on the Near West Side. The Commission on Chicago Landmarks, whose ten members are appointed by the Mayor and City Council, was established in 1968 by city ordinance. The Commission is responsible for recommending to the City Council which individual buildings, sites, objects, or districts should be designated as Chicago Landmarks, which protects them by law. The landmark designation process begins with a staff study and a preliminary summary of informa- tion related to the potential designation criteria. The next step is a preliminary vote by the landmarks commission as to whether the proposed landmark is worthy of consideration. This vote not only initiates the formal designation process, but it places the review of city permits for the property under the jurisdic- tion of the Commission until a final landmark recommendation is acted on by the City Council. This Landmark Designation Report is subject to possible revision and amendment during the designation process. Only language contained within the designation ordinance adopted by the City Council should be regarded as final. COMMISSION ON CHICAGO LANDMARKS David Mosena, Chairman John W. Baird, Secretary Phyllis Ellin Yvette LeGrand Chris Raguso Christopher R. Reed Patricia A. Scudiero Edward I. Torrez Ben Weese Ernest C. Wong The Commission is staffed by the Chicago Department of Zoning and Land Use Planning Historic Preservation Division 33 N. LaSalle Street, Suite 1600, Chicago, IL 60602 312-744-3200; 744-2958 (TTY) http://www.cityofchicago.org/landmarks Preliminary Landmark recommendation approved December 3, 2009; Report revised and Reprinted February 2010. UNION PARK HOTEL (FORMERLY THE VICEROY HOTEL) 1519-1521 W. WARREN BOULEVARD BUILT: 1929-30 ARCHITECT: BENJAMIN ALBERT COMM The Union Park Hotel is a significant example of a Chicago residential apartment hotel building due to its distinctive Art Deco architectural style, unusually colorful and finely detailed terra-cotta facade, and its prominent location on Warren Boulevard opposite historic Union Park. Constructed of polychromatic glazed terra cotta and yellow and golden-brown brick, this residential hotel building (more recently known as the Viceroy Hotel) was conceived as a “modernistic” building, adopting the then-popular style of the fast-paced, “Jazz Age” society. It was completed in 1930 and designed by Chicago architect Benjamin Albert Comm. Terra cotta glazes in pastel hues accentuate the Union Park Hotel’s sophisticated French- influenced Art Deco-style decoration, including bands of geometric motifs, sunbursts, angular zigzags, and stylized floral panels. Despite the relatively small-scale of the building, its vivid design and distinctive colors enhance its visual presence on the south side of Union Park. The building’s terra-cotta façade reflects the appeal of colored terra cotta in the late 1920s as advances in terra-cotta manufacturing made possible a vast array of details and colors for building design. Chicago was an important national center of terra-cotta manufacturing, and the building reflects the popularity of this building material with Chicago builders and architects and the significance of the terra-cotta industry to Chicago. 1 THE NEAR WEST SIDE NEIGHBORHOOD The Union Park Hotel is located two miles west of downtown Chicago on the Near West Side, one of Chicago’s oldest neighborhoods that has sustained cycles of growth, decline, and renewal. The neighborhood first emerged as a fashionable residential district in the 1860s, catering especially to wealthy Chicago families such as the Honores (Bertha Honore Palmer, society doyenne and wife of hotel operator Potter Palmer being the most prominent member of this family). Surviving examples of the Near West Side’s “Gold Coast” include the Groesbeck House (a designated Chicago Landmark) from 1869, located four blocks east of Union Park and the Jackson Boulevard Chicago Landmark District, located three blocks to the south and comprised largely of buildings along the 1500-blocks of W. Jackson and W. Adams built from the 1870s through the early 1890s. The building was originally named for Union Park, located immediately across Warren Boulevard. In addition to the Near West Side’s proximity to downtown, the establishment of Union Park in 1853 had further encouraged residential development in the late 19th century. The 13-acre site is one of the city’s oldest parks and is an important part of the Union Park Hotel’s setting. Also facing Union Park is the designated Chicago Landmark First Baptist Congregational Church, built in 1871 and located on N. Ashland. Around the turn of the 20th century, the expansion of the city’s downtown and improvements in public transportation resulted in greater commercial development and increased population density on the Near West Side. By the time of the construction of the Union Park Hotel in 1930, many of the older residential buildings had been converted to multifamily dwellings to house an expanding population of African Americans as well as Mexican, Italian, and Greek immigrants that had settled in the area. Several local labor unions also set up headquarters in converted houses and purpose-built office buildings in the neighborhood during the years leading up to the Great Depression of the 1930s. When the hotel opened, Union Park was one of the first racially-integrated parks in the city. Between the 1920s and the 1950s, the park hosted a number of outdoor concerts featuring notable African-American musicians, including the noted pioneer of gospel music Thomas A. Dorsey; trumpeter Sunny Cohn; and jazz pianist Ramsey Lewis. BUILDING CONSTRUCTION AND D ESCRIPTION In its March 10, 1929, story on the construction of the Union Park Hotel, the Chicago Tribune reported that the new hotel would “contrast to the majority of the structures of the locality, which are representative of the older styles of the city’s architecture” and that the new “modernistic design will add a dash of color to a district which has been well daubed by Old Father Time for the front elevation is to be finished in terra cotta of varied hues.” The building’s Art Deco design and its use of colorful terra-cotta decoration lend the Union Park Hotel a vivid and distinctive appearance. 2 Union Park Hotel The Union Park Hotel is located at 1519-1521 W. Warren Boulevard in Chicago’s Near West Side. 3 Union Park Hotel Bui;lding The Union Park Hotel is located on a triangular city block bounded by Ashland Avenue to the west, Warren Boulevard to the north, and the diagonal Ogden Avenue to the southeast. Immediately north of the building is Union Park. In addition to being an amenity for the hotel’s guest and residents, the park setting enhances the visibility of the Union Park Hotel from the surrounding blocks. The front façade (north elevation) of the building is built up to the sidewalk and extends approximately 80 feet along Warren Blvd., and the east and west side elevations measure 115 feet deep to a rear alley. The building’s basic H-shaped plan is created by light wells centered on the building’s side elevations. The six-story-tall structure consists of load-bearing masonry walls, steel columns, and clay-tile partitions intended to reduce the risk of fire. The front (north) façade, facing Warren Blvd. and Union Park, is highly decorative while the relatively plain side (east and west) and alley (south) elevations are constructed of Chicago common brick. The six-story hotel’s front elevation is eight bays wide and is characterized by strong symmetry. Clad with highly-stylized terra-cotta decoration in a palate of creamy beige, brown, golden, and pastel hues, the Union Park Hotel’s front façade utilizes a basic three-part division with a prominent single-story base anchoring a uniformly expressed shaft that rises to a lively roofline. Beginning with its dark-toned band of brown terra cotta situated at the ground level, its sandy beige-colored first story, and its bright cream-colored piers that rise to the parapet, the building’s terra cotta ornament is shaded into lighter and lighter tonalities as it rises toward the top. The building’s base is clad in dark brown terra cotta that is slightly darker than the rest of the building, giving it a weightier appearance. Large street-level storefront windows are framed with decorative-metal frames with ornamental cresting, and the central entrance door is located within a segmented-arch opening that recalls the corbelled-arches of Mayan architecture, a motif often borrowed by the Art Deco style of architecture. A decorative terra-cotta string course marks the division between the first floor and the upper stories and features a chevron pattern with superimposed green, white, pink, and yellow geometric motifs. Above the street level, the design takes on a strong vertical emphasis dominated by continuous piers of golden-yellow face brick set off by white terra-cotta bands that extend the full height of the building. At the central bay the brick piers are replaced by three fluted piers in white terra cotta. Spandrel panels are recessed and faced with beige face brick set in a “stack bond,” where the mortar joints between bricks are aligned both vertically and horizontally. Ornamental terra-cotta medallions with geometric floral motifs in green, white and yellow occupy the center of each spandrel. Punched window openings are framed with chevron-decorated lintels and projecting sills in terra-cotta. The uninterrupted piers draw the eye upward to the building’s decorated rooftop parapet.
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